At present, research is being done on the possibility that pigs are intermediate hosts for N. americanus. Research has shown that the approximately 15% of eggs ingested by a pig host will pass through in the feces.
Nematodes within the Secernentea have phasmids, which are unicellular glands. Phasmids likely function as chemoreceptors. Females may produce pheromones to attract males.
Nematodes in general have papillae, setae and amphids as the main sense organs. Setae detect motion (mechanoreceptors), while amphids detect chemicals (chemoreceptors).
Communication Channels: tactile ; chemical
Other Communication Modes: pheromones
Perception Channels: tactile ; chemical
None
US Federal List: no special status
CITES: no special status
Necator americanus adults are obligate internal parasites of humans. Both the first and second stage rhabditiform larvae are free-living. Eggs are passed out through the feces of humans. These eggs will hatch within 2 days, and the first rhabditiform larva emerges. This larva will molt twice within 10 days to become a third stage filariform larva. The filariform larva will come into contact with the host's skin, and burrow into it. Travelling through the circulatory system to the lungs, the third stage larva will either be coughed up and swallowed or will migrate up the bronchi to the throat area. Once swallowed, the larva will make its way to the intestine. Upon reaching the intestine, the larva will molt twice and an adult will emerge. This adult will use its hooks to attach itself to the inner wall of the intestine and will cause hemorrhaging. The worm will feed from this blood. Mating occurs in the intestine. The eggs are the passed out with the feces.
As a strict parasite of humans, N. americanus has played a major role in the development of the New and Old worlds. Large numbers of worms cause what is known as "hookworm disease".
Nutrition and blood loss are the major contributors to ill effects from the interaction between host and parasite. The severity of the disease is directly related to the number of worms in the host's body. Each worm is capable of ingesting .03 ml of blood per day. When small amounts of worms have infected a host, the patient will be asymptomatic. Once infections reach 25 to 100 worms, the patient will experience light symptoms that include fatigue, slight weight loss, and possible headaches. Once infestations reach between 100-500 the patient will experience fatigue, iron deficiency leading to anemia, loss of appetite and abdominal pains. Should the infestation reach over 500, the patient will experience anemia and, depending on the diet of the person, possibly death. Children are at greater risks for lifelong damage and death due to their smaller size and greater need for nutrition. Generally infestation does not lead to death, but many cause permanent damage. The mortality rate for N. americanus is around .005% while the morbidity rate is 12%.
Treatment of N. americanus infections is simple, but resistance has been detected to usual treatments. Preventive measures include proper waste disposal, clean water, and proper footwear. Since the larvae need direct skin contact to invade the host, protective clothing is a key to maintaining low incidence rates.
Negative Impacts: injures humans (causes disease in humans )
None
Necator americanus mainly infects humans and appears to prefer male hosts to female hosts. However, this may be due to the division of labor in areas of high infestation.
Ecosystem Impact: parasite
Species Used as Host:
Adult N. americanus feed from the blood of their hosts. The worm will attach itself to the intestinal wall and use its cutting plates to cause bleeding. The worm feeds from this blood, possibly causing anemia to the host. Necator americanus does not permanently attach itself to the wall. This allows movement to new sites for feeding and reproduction within the host. Previous sites continue to bleed, adding the host's blood loss.
Animal Foods: blood; body fluids
Primary Diet: carnivore (Sanguivore , Eats body fluids)
Necator americanus is found in Africa, Asia, and Europe but is predominately found in the Americas and in Australia. In the United States, the largest concentration is found in the southern and southwestern United States. In the rest of the world, N. americanus is found in tropical climates.
Biogeographic Regions: nearctic ; palearctic ; oriental ; ethiopian ; neotropical ; australian
Other Geographic Terms: cosmopolitan
Adult N. americanus are found exclusively in tropical and temperate regions. Eggs require a moist, warm and shaded environment to hatch. Optimal temperatures for juveniles to mature are from 23 to 30 deg C. Eggs and juveniles die below freezing or with soil dessication. Heavy rains and warmer temperatures appear to have a high positive correlation with the rate of transmission. Necator americanus appears to prefer male hosts to female hosts. However, this may be due to the division of labor in areas of high infestation. Soil type also plays a major part in the habitat for these worms. Ideal soil conditions are where the water drains but not too quickly. The pore size of the soil particle is a major factor.
Habitat Regions: temperate ; tropical
Terrestrial Biomes: savanna or grassland ; forest ; rainforest ; scrub forest
Aquatic Biomes: lakes and ponds; temporary pools
Wetlands: marsh ; swamp
Other Habitat Features: urban ; suburban ; agricultural
The adult worms can live up to 5 years.
As a nematode, Necator americanus has a cylindrical body, and a cuticle with three main outer layers made of collagen and other compounds, secreted by the epidermis. The cuticle layer protects the nematode so it can invade digestive tracts of animals.
Eggs range in size from 65-75 micrometers x 36-40 micrometers and are virtually indistinguishable from those of Ancylostoma duodenale, another common hookworm. Necator americanus has four larval stages. The first stage is referred to as rhabditiform larvae because the esophagus has a large bulb separated from the rest of the esophagus by a region called the isthmus. The third stage is referred to as filariform larvae because the esophagus has no bulb. Adult females range in size from 9 mm to 11 mm while the smaller males range in size from 7 mm to 9 mm. The mouth of the adults has two pair of cutting plates, one dorsal and the other ventral. The males of the species are characterized by fused spicules found on the bursa. The common name "hookworm" comes from the dorsal curve at the anterior end.
Range length: 7 to 11 mm.
Other Physical Features: ectothermic ; heterothermic ; bilateral symmetry
Sexual Dimorphism: female larger; sexes shaped differently
These parasites are probably not preyed on directly, but are ingested from host to host. Larval mortality is high as most of the parasites do not reach appropriate hosts.
Sexual maturity is reached at the final molt. Egg production in females occurs five weeks or more after the female matures. Mating occurs in the intestine of the host.
Males are required to find females and inject their sperm into the females. Females may produce a pheromone to attract males. The male coils around a female with his curved area over the female genital pore. The gubernaculum, made of cuticle tissue, guides spicules which extend through the cloaca and anus. Males use spicules to hold open the genital opening on the female to allow transfer of sperm, which are amoeboid-like and lack flagella. The fertilized females then lay eggs in the surrounding areas. Females are capable of producing 10,000 eggs per day. The eggs are the passed out with the feces.
Key Reproductive Features: gonochoric/gonochoristic/dioecious (sexes separate); sexual ; fertilization (Internal ); oviparous
There is no parental investment beyond egg laying.
Parental Investment: pre-fertilization (Provisioning)
The human hookworms include the nematode species Necator americanus and Ancylostoma duodenale. A larger group of hookworm species normally infecting non-human animals can invade and parasitize humans or can penetrate the human skin--causing cutaneous larva migrans--but do not develop any further. Hookworm is the second most common human helminthic infection (after ascariasis) and among the most common chronic infections in the world, affecting around three quarters of a billion people in the tropics and subtropics, particularly in China and sub-Saharan Africa (deSilva et al. 2003). Hookworm species are worldwide in distribution, mostly in areas with moist, warm climates. Both N. americanus and A. duodenale are found in Africa, Asia, and the Americas. Necator americanus predominates in the Americas and Australia, while only A. duodenale is found in the Middle East, North Africa, and southern Europe.
Hookworms are transmiited to humans via contact with contaminated soil. Eggs are passed in the stool and under favorable conditions (moisture, warmth, shade), larvae hatch in 1 to 2 days.The released rhabditiform larvae grow in the feces and/or the soil and after 5 to 10 days (and two molts) they become filariform (third-stage) larvae that are infective. These infective larvae can survive 3 to 4 weeks in favorable environmental conditions. On contact with the human host, the larvae penetrate the skin and are carried through the blood vessels to the heart and then to the lungs.They penetrate into the pulmonary alveoli, ascend the bronchial tree to the pharynx, and are swallowed. The larvae reach the small intestine, where they reside and mature into adults. Adult worms live in the lumen of the small intestine, where they attach to the intestinal wall with resultant blood loss by the host. Most adult worms are eliminated in 1 to 2 years, but longevity may reach several years. Some A. duodenale larvae, following penetration of the host skin, can become dormant (in the intestine or muscle). In addition, infection by A. duodenale probably also occurs by the oral and transmammary route. Necator americanus, however, requires a transpulmonary migration phase. Iron deficiency anemia (caused by blood loss at the site of intestinal attachment of the adult worms) is the most common symptom of hookworm infection, and can be accompanied by cardiac complications. Gastrointestinal and nutritional/metabolic symptoms can also occur. In addition, local skin manifestations ('ground itch') can occur during penetration by the filariform (L3) larvae, and respiratory symptoms can be observed during pulmonary migration of the larvae.
(Primary source: Centers for Disease Control Parasites and Health Website)
Loukas et al. (2006) discussed the need for and prospects of developing a human hookworm vaccine. Hotez et al. (2004) provide a broad review of issues related to human hookworm infection.
Safura ni aina za minyoo midogo ambayo inasababisha anemia.
Necator americanus is a species of hookworm (a type of helminth) commonly known as the New World hookworm. Like other hookworms, it is a member of the phylum Nematoda. It is an obligatory parasitic nematode that lives in the small intestine of human hosts.[1] Necatoriasis—a type of helminthiasis—is the term for the condition of being host to an infestation of a species of Necator. Since N. americanus and Ancylostoma duodenale (also known as Old World hookworm) are the two species of hookworms that most commonly infest humans, they are usually dealt with under the collective heading of "hookworm infection". They differ most obviously in geographical distribution, structure of mouthparts, and relative size.[2]
Necator americanus has been proposed as an alternative to Trichuris suis in helminthic therapy.[3]
This parasite has two dorsal and two ventral cutting plates around the anterior margin of the buccal capsule. It also has a pair of subdorsal and a pair of subventral teeth located close to the rear. Males are usually 7–9 mm long, whereas females are about 9–11 mm long. The typical lifespan of these parasites is 3–5 years. They can produce between 5,000 and 10,000 eggs per day.[4]
N. americanus is primarily found in tropical and temperate areas. This parasite thrives in warmer climates because to hatch, the eggs require a moist, warm, and shaded environment. The thin, smooth shells of this species cause the eggs and juveniles to die in freezing temperatures or with soil desiccation. Therefore, the type of soil where the parasite resides is also very important for their ideal living conditions. Ideal soil conditions tend to be in areas where water is able to drain at a standard pace, and the size of the soil particles is neither too large nor too small. That way, the degree of dampness, as well as the openings in the soil, allow the parasites to burrow to the surface and attach to the skin of their next host. High transmission rates seem to be congruent with the heavy rains and warm temperatures that are characteristic of tropical climates. One anomaly of this species is that it appears to prefer male hosts to female hosts, likely because of the division of labor in regions of its prevalence.[5]
This worm starts out as an unembryonated egg in the soil. After 24–48 hours under favorable conditions, the eggs become embryonated and hatch. This first juvenile stage 1 is known as 'rhabditiform'. The rhabditiform larvae grow and molt in the soil, transforming into a juvenile stage 2. The juvenile stage 2 molts once more until reaching the juvenile 3 stage, which is also called 'filariform'; this is also the infective form. The transformation from rhabditiform to the filariform usually takes 5–10 days.[6] This larval form is able to penetrate human skin, travel through the blood vessels and heart, and reach the lungs. Once there, it burrows through the pulmonary alveoli and travels up the trachea, where it is swallowed and carried to the small intestine. There, it attaches to the intestinal wall, and matures into an adult and begins reproduction. Adults live in the lumen of the intestinal wall, where they cause blood loss to the host. The eggs produced by the adults end up on the soil after leaving the body through the feces; female hookworms produce up to 30,000 eggs per day.[7][8] On average, most adult worms are eliminated in 1–2 years. The N. americanus lifecycle only differs slightly from that of A. duodenale. N. americanus has no development arrest in immune hosts and it must migrate through the lungs.
The pathology of N. americanus is divided into two stages – larvae and adults. The larvae penetrate the uninfected skin and travel through various organs, including the respiratory tract and lymph nodes. Once in the lymph nodes, the larvae start entering the blood, lungs, and intestines. Some larvae cannot readily enter the dermis and remain trapped in the skin, causing skin irritation and cutaneous larva migrans. Other symptoms include excessive coughing and dyspnea (short of breath) during larval migration. Once attached to the intestinal wall, N. americanus resides and matures into adults, penetrates blood vessels, and sucks blood. The incubation process of the larvae begins once entered into the small intestine; therefore, symptoms may not arise for up to 40 days, but this is variable from person to person.[9] Blood loss from sites of intestinal attachment may cause iron-deficiency anemia and protein loss.[8] One individual N. americanus can cause 30 μl of blood loss per day.[10] Iron-deficiency anemia can cause intellectual disability and growth insufficiency in children. Further, infected patients experience abdominal pain (exacerbated by meals) with diarrhea, bloating, and nausea.[11]
In the United States, 95% of human hookworm cases are caused by N. americanus, primarily in young school children in economically deprived rural areas. Historically, there have been high rates of infection among children in the American South.[12] Juveniles cannot survive freezing temperatures, so the highest prevalence occurs in areas with warmer temperatures and greater rainfall. The greatest incidence of infections occurs in Asia and sub-Saharan Africa, especially in poverty-stricken areas with poor sanitation.[8] A. duodenale infections occur at a lesser rate and are seen primarily in Europe and the Mediterranean.[13]
A draft assembly of the genome of Necator americanus has been sequenced and analyzed.[14] It comprises 244 Mbp with 19,151 predicted protein-coding genes; these include genes whose products mediate the hookworm's invasion of the human host, genes involved in blood feeding and development, genes encoding proteins that represent new potential drug targets against hookworms, and expanded gene families encoding likely immunomodulator proteins, whose products may be beneficial in treating inflammatory diseases and asthma.[15]
The most common method for diagnosing N. americanus is through identification of eggs in a fecal sample using a microscope. N. americanus eggs have a thin shell and are oval shaped, measuring roughly 56–74 by 36–40 μm.[16]
The most common treatment for N. americanus infection are benzimidazoles, specifically albendazole and mebendazole. Benzimidazoles kill adult worms by binding to the nematode’s β-tubulin and subsequently inhibiting microtubule polymerization within the parasite.[17] The efficacy of single-dose treatments for hookworm infections were: 72% for albendazole, 15% for mebendazole, and 31% for pyrantel pamoate.[18] A current concern with this parasite is the increase in drug resistance, such as benzimidazoles and mebendazoles.[19]
Pregnant women should not be treated within their first trimester.[9]
During the 1940s, the treatment of choice was tetrachloroethylene,[20] given as 3 to 4 cc in the fasting state, followed by 30 to 45 g of sodium sulfate. Tetrachloroethylene was reported to have a cure rate of 80 percent for Necator infections, but 25 percent in Ancylostoma infections, and often produced mild intoxication in the patient.
Infection and transmission of others can be prevented by not defecating outdoors or using human feces as fertilizer.[21] This parasite is not transmittable directly from person to person.[9] Pigs may be an intermediate host for N. americanus.[1]
N. americanus causes hookworm diseases, which are associated with blood loss and anemia. Patients who are infected with around 25 to 100 worms experience symptoms such as fatigue, weight loss, and slight headaches. As the infestation number reaches 100 to 500 worms, the patient experiences extreme fatigue, iron deficiency, and abdominal pain. The symptoms worsen and result in possible death when the infestation reaches over 500 hookworms. Children and pregnant women affected by N. americanus are at greater risk due to anemia and the greater need for dietary iron and protein. The demand is high for an improvement of sanitation to reduce fecal contamination in regions with high prevalence of N. americanus infections. The current control strategies include a combination of mass drug administration for children at age 4–6 years to prevent or eliminate N. americanus infections.[22]
Necator americanus is a species of hookworm (a type of helminth) commonly known as the New World hookworm. Like other hookworms, it is a member of the phylum Nematoda. It is an obligatory parasitic nematode that lives in the small intestine of human hosts. Necatoriasis—a type of helminthiasis—is the term for the condition of being host to an infestation of a species of Necator. Since N. americanus and Ancylostoma duodenale (also known as Old World hookworm) are the two species of hookworms that most commonly infest humans, they are usually dealt with under the collective heading of "hookworm infection". They differ most obviously in geographical distribution, structure of mouthparts, and relative size.
Necator americanus has been proposed as an alternative to Trichuris suis in helminthic therapy.
Necator americanus o necator americano es una especie de helminto del género Necator, clasificado dentro del filo Nematoda. Es un parásito que vive en el intestino delgado de huéspedes, como los humanos, cerdos, perros y gatos, produciendo la enfermedad llamada necatoriasis. Junto con el Ancylostoma duodenale son los ancilostomas (Uncinarias) que afectan con más frecuencias a los humanos, el Necator americanus se presenta en el Nuevo Mundo, mientras el Ancylosthoma duodenale, lo hace en el Viejo Mundo. Son bastante similares difiriendo únicamente en su distribución geográfica, las estructuras de la boca y el tamaño.[1]
Necator americanus, se ha propuesto como una alternativa para el Trichuris suis en la terapia con helmintos.[2]
Este parásito posee dos placas cortantes dorsales y dos ventrales alrededor del margen anterior de la cápsula bucal. También tiene un par de dientes a nivel subdorsal y un par a nivel subventral localizados cerca del extremo posterior. Los machos tienen usualmente 7 a 9 mm de longitud. La vida media promedio de estos parásitos oscila entre 3 y 5 años. Pueden producir entre 5.000 a 10.000 huevos por día.[3]
Este gusano se origina a partir de un huevo anembrionado en el suelo. Bajo condiciones favorables, después de 24 a 48 horas, los huevos se tornan embrionados y eclosionan. La primera etapa juvenil de su existencia se le llama rabditiforme (en forma de bastón). Las larvas rabditiformes crecen y mudan en el suelo, transformándose en la segunda etapa juvenil. En la segunda etapa, mudan una vez más alcanzando la tercera etapa juvenil, también llamada filariforme (en forma de filaria). Esta última es la forma infecciosa. La transformación de la forma rabditiforme a la filariforme toma de 5 a 10 días.[4] Esta forma larvaria es capaz de penetrar la piel humana, migrar por el torrente sanguíneo y alcanzar el pulmón pasando por el ventrículo derecho del corazón. Una vez ahí, perforan y penetran la cavidad alveolar y ascienden por la tráquea donde son deglutidos descendiendo hasta el intestino delgado. En este sitio maduran y se convierten en adultos asiéndose a la pared intestinal, alimentándose de sangre, causando en casos severos una disminución significatriva de las cifras de hemoglobina al huésped ya que cada gusano es capaz de ingerir entre 0,35 a 0,65 ml de sangre al día. Los huevos terminan en el suelo, dejando el cuerpo a través de las heces.[5] En promedio, la mayoría de los gusanos adultos son eliminados en 1 a 2 años. El ciclo de vida de N. americanus difiere ligeramente del A. duodenale. N. americanus no desarrolla defensas en los huéspedes inmunes, siendo esto necesario, para su migración a través de los pulmones.
N.americanus fue descubierto inicialmente en Brasil y posteriormente encontrado también en Texas y los llanos de Venezuela. Fue descrito también en nativos de África, China, islas del pacífico sur, India y el Sudeste de Asia. Es un parásito de tipo tropical y es una especie común en los humanos. Aproximadamente el 95% de los ancilostomas encontrados en el sudeste de los Estados Unidos son N.americanus. Este parásito es encontrado en humanos, pero también se halla en cerdos, perros y gatos.
La trasmisión de Necator americanus requiere el depósito de heces con huevos en suelos sombreados y bien drenados y su desarrollo es favorecido por condiciones del clima tropical como el calor y humedad. Por esta razón las infecciones alrededor del mundo son frecuentemente reportadas en sitios donde ocurre contacto con suelos contaminados.
Cuando los gusanos adultos se adosan a las vellosidades del intestino delgado, succionan la sangre del huésped, lo que puede causar dolor abdominal, diarrea, cólicos y perdida de peso que pueden producir anorexia. Las infestaciones severas pueden causar deficiencia de hierro y anemia microcitica hipocrómica. Este tipo de anemia en los niños puede generar retardo psíquico y físico.[6]
La técnica más común de diagnóstico para Necator americanus es mediante la toma de una muestra de materia fecal, fijarla en formalina al 10% y concentrarla con la técnica de sedimentación con etilacetato de formalina, recogiendo entonces el sedimento para verlo al microscopio. Sin embargo los huevos de A. duodenale y N. americanus no pueden ser distinguidos entre sí, lo que puede hacerse por medio de la identificación de las larvas. Estas pueden ser encontradas en la materia fecal hasta que las muestras permanezcan a temperatura ambiente por un día o más.
Para una prevención efectiva son esenciales la educación, instauración de buenas condiciones sanitarias y la disposición adecuada de los excrementos humanos. En forma adicional, el uso de calzado en zonas endémicas ayuda a reducir la ocurrencia de la infección.
La parasitosis por N. americanus puede ser tratada con benzimidazoles, albendazol y mebendazol. Una dosis oral de tetracloroeteno con el estómago vacío puede eliminar hasta el 90% de los parásitos. El medicamento alternativo es el pamoato de pirantel. La crioterapia es otro tratamiento usado para matar estos nemátodos. En los casos severos de anemia puede requerirse transfusión de sangre. Las infecciones leves generalmente permanecen sin tratamiento en áreas donde la reinfección es frecuente. Los suplementos de hierro y una dieta rica en proteínas acelera el proceso de recuperación.[7] En un estudio de casos que involucró a 60 hombres con Trichuris trichiura y/o N. americanus, mostró que tanto el albendazol como el mebendazol eran 90% efectivos para curar la T. trichiura. Sin embargo, el albendazol tenía una tasa de curación del 95% para N. americanus, mientras el mebendazol solo tenía una porcentaje de cura del 21%. Esto sugiere que el albendazol es más efectivo para el tratamiento de la infección combinada de T. trichiura y N. americanus.[8]
Necator americanus o necator americano es una especie de helminto del género Necator, clasificado dentro del filo Nematoda. Es un parásito que vive en el intestino delgado de huéspedes, como los humanos, cerdos, perros y gatos, produciendo la enfermedad llamada necatoriasis. Junto con el Ancylostoma duodenale son los ancilostomas (Uncinarias) que afectan con más frecuencias a los humanos, el Necator americanus se presenta en el Nuevo Mundo, mientras el Ancylosthoma duodenale, lo hace en el Viejo Mundo. Son bastante similares difiriendo únicamente en su distribución geográfica, las estructuras de la boca y el tamaño.
Necator americanus, se ha propuesto como una alternativa para el Trichuris suis en la terapia con helmintos.
Necator americanus est une espèce de vers parasites, responsable de l'ankylostomose humaine de même que Ankylostoma duodenale. Ils sont responsables d'une seule et même maladie.
C'est un nématode trouvé sur l'ensemble des continents, mais surtout en Amérique et en Australie dans les régions tropicales et tempérées.
Necator americanus est une espèce de vers parasites, responsable de l'ankylostomose humaine de même que Ankylostoma duodenale. Ils sont responsables d'une seule et même maladie.
C'est un nématode trouvé sur l'ensemble des continents, mais surtout en Amérique et en Australie dans les régions tropicales et tempérées.
C'est un parasite obligatoire de l'espèce humaine. Sa longévité est de cinq ans. Il mesure de 5 à 10 mm.Necator americanus é uma espécie de nematódeo do gênero Necator responsável pela necatoríase.[1]
O Necator americanus conhecido como ancilostoma do novo mundo, pertence a família Ancylostomidae de Nemátodas e tem sua ocorrência em regiões tropicais.
Vermes adultos de forma cilíndrica, com a extremidade cefálica recurvada dorsalmente; cápsula bucal profunda com duas lâminas cortantes na margem interna da boca. O macho (5 a 9mm) é menor que a fêmea (9 a 11mm)
Necator americanus é uma espécie de nematódeo do gênero Necator responsável pela necatoríase.
O Necator americanus conhecido como ancilostoma do novo mundo, pertence a família Ancylostomidae de Nemátodas e tem sua ocorrência em regiões tropicais.